Tucson Citizen.com

Era’s End: 33 years of Pac-10 football history, records, bowls and championships

by on Jun. 20, 2011, under Sports
UA_ASU_2010

Where do the Cats and Devils rank after 33 years?
Photo by Rob Schumacher/The Arizona Republic

We are less than two weeks away from the official start of the Pac-12. It will begin a time of increased excitement, exposure and prosperity for the conference.

That’s the good news.

The bad news is July 1 will be the official end of the Pac-10, the most balanced, competitively perfect league in college sports.

Dab your misty eyes and let’s look back at the won-loss records, bowl appearances and championships from 33 years of Pac-10 football.

In the summer of 1978 the Pacific-8 added the University of Arizona and Arizona State to form a 10-team conference. Here’s how the league stacks up in only Pac-10 games after 3+ decades on the gridiron:

Pac-10 conference record
(Edit: The above totals were corrected after the original post and do not include vacated or forfeited games. For the complete records including sanctions go here.)

No one is closer to exactly .500 than Arizona. That about sums up the last 33 years for Wildcat fans.

Here is each school’s overall football record since expansion:


(These totals were also corrected since the original post. All the following numbers are correct.)

Next we have the bowl records from the Pac-10 era:


(WSU’s bowl record has been corrected since the original post due to reader input. It takes a village!)

The fact that the Bruins and Huskies have been down recently should not be taken for granted. Steve Sarkisian has momentum on his side in Seattle after the Holiday Bowl win but the pressure is really on Rick Neuheisel at UCLA this year.

Upping the ante are the BCS bowl records, and by “BCS” I mean the current five biggest bowls: the Rose, Fiesta, Orange, Sugar and BCS Championship Game:

BCS bowl records

Just in case UCLA was feeling a little too good about itself:

most recent BCS bowl win

The Pac-10 won four national championships in its 33-year run. USC was voted No. 1 after the 1978, 2003 and 2004 seasons, and Washington was awarded the hardware in 1991.

One of the best parts about the Pac-10 as a football conference was its balance. Every single team won at least a share of at least one league championship. Here’s the full list:

conference championships

The same balance wasn’t found when 30 Rose Bowl bids were handed out. Tie-breakers apparently don’t take into account a fan base’s level of historical suffering.

Rose Bowls

It’s interesting that in the last 33 years only four Pac-10 schools have won the Rose Bowl, with only three winning it more than once.

Perhaps the best part about conference realignment for Arizona fans is the Cats now have company on the Pac-12/Big Ten Never-Been-To-The-Rose-Bowl list. Colorado and Utah, the UA’s new Pac-12 South-mates, have never played in the Granddaddy of Them All. Nebraska, however, has. Twice already. The nerve.

I know every one of the Pac-12’s changes was necessary to allow the conference’s member schools to better compete on a national level. I’m on board with Larry Scott’s quest for world domination.

That doesn’t mean I won’t still miss the round-robin schedule. I’ll miss having an on-the-field champion without having to play a conference championship game. I’ll miss the Pac-10.

But hey, Arizona is tied for first on every single all-time Pac-12 list. Let the new era begin.

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Stayed tuned for the basketball numbers and, oh yes, even baseball!

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Scott Terrell wants to be on your list. Don’t wait 33 years to follow him on Twitter and Facebook.

More in TC Sports Network:

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  • Mike B.

    Go CATS

  • onewoodwhacker

    USC 168-75-5
    Washington 157-105-3
    UCLA 151-109-5
    Oregon 144-117-2

    This UW Husky would like to know:

    According to your records posted above, it’s interesting to note that USC only played 248 PAC-10 games, while Washington played 265, UCLA played 265 and Oregon played 263.

    Could this explain why USC has only 11 more wins than us but 30 less losses? Or, is the USC record reflective of the 10 vacated PAC-10 wins of 2004? 

    Still, about 7 games are missing – what happened?

    Thanks OWW – Puyallup WA

    • http://uasports.net Scott Terrell

      Hello, OWW!  

      You are correct that USC’s vacated wins aren’t included in the cumulative standings.  Another reason for the gap is the schedules weren’t even when the Arizona schools first joined.  In the early part of the Pac-10 USC was only playing 7 conference games a year while UW and others were playing 8.

      On top of that it looks like the Pac-10′s record book has also failed to scrub the numbers for things like ASU forfeiting  some Pac-10 wins in 1979 and Cal forfeiting a few in 1999.  So the “official” won-loss records above should be used for entertainment purposes only. :)

      Edit: Now you’ve got me curious so I’m going to balance the Pac-10′s checkbook, so to speak. I have the numbers for both football and basketball through 2007 where the total wins equal the total losses so I’ll go back and figure it out from there. Thanks for reading!

      Edit Edit: It is done!

  • David Neste

    Please do the same article for basketball.